The passes provide access to keynote speeches and a number of exhibition halls, as well as a special Java Frontier sessions track aimed at students. They can also enjoy technical sessions, hands-on lab events and "Birds-of-a-Feather" networking sessions -- space permitting.

Oracle is more interested in the relationship between "an Oracle business expert and a customer business leader ... The concerns of developers are just not material at that level," the person reportedly said.

The vendor's outreach to student programmers regarding the upcoming events shows the company has far from abandoned efforts to grow its developer community.

But the essence of Bray's post rings true, due to the nature of Oracle's business, according to Redmonk analyst Michael Coté.

"Oracle certainly likes developers, no doubt," he said. "[But] Oracle's core business model is cemented in enterprise product lines and milking revenue from them -- Siebel, PeopleSoft, Oracle databases and now Java," he said.

Most large companies are already sizable users of those technologies, Coté said. Therefore, Oracle has no need to court developers like an open-source company would in order to generate "viral, bottom-up sales," he said.